
You’d
have to take a careful look at the jars of Skippy peanut
butter to notice the difference. The prices are the same, but
the jars are getting smaller. They don't look any different,
but recently, the jars developed a dimple in the bottom that
slices the contents to 16.3 ounces from 18 ounces -- about 10
percent less peanut butter.
Other manufacturers are also trimming packages, nipping a
half-ounce off their bars of soap, narrowing the width of
toilet paper and shrinking the size of ice cream containers.
Often, the changes are so subtle that they create "the
illusion that you are buying the same amount," according
Frank Luby, a pricing consultant.
Unilever also changed the shape of its Breyers ice cream
containers, reducing the contents to 1.5 quarts from 1.75
quarts. Competitor Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream did the same.
Kellogg Co. Reduced the weight of many popular cereals an
average of 2.4 ounces per box. From the front, the size of the
box remains the same; only the depth was reduced. Dial shaved
its soap bars to 4 ounces, down from 4.5 ounces, but kept the
size and look of its packaging the same.
Many of these changes were made when food commodity and oil
prices surged to record highs. It's not clear what the
companies will do now that the cost pressures have eased. But
according to Luby, they're not likely to go back to the larger
sizes, since any backlash is likely to be small. "Many
people notice the change but they don't protest and stop
buying their favorite brand of cereal," he said.
"These brands are strong enough to overcome any
backlash."